James Q. Whitman, Harsh Justice: Criminal Punishment and the Widening Divide between America and Europe. New York: Oxford University Press, 2003. Pp. 311. $40. America perceives itself and is perceived by others as part of the liberal West. Yet, at least in the area of punishment, argues James Whitman from the Yale Law School, America no longer belongs in this liberal company. Because of its tough-on-crime ideology and practice in the last twentyfive years, America has edged its way into the embarrassing company of countries like Iran, Nigeria, China, and even Nazi Germany. The comparison with Nazism might sound to the reader as exaggerated, yet, argues Whitman, one cannot ignore the analogy between the Nazi turn towards retributivism and...
Defenders bear witness to an awful social experiment gone awry. Punishment has taken the place of ev...
The author examines the cultural and social factors that have impacted the United States’s and Europ...
According to the Enlightenment philosopher Montesquieu, as freedom advances, the severity of the pe...
James Q. Whitman, Harsh Justice: Criminal Punishment and the Widening Divide between America and Eur...
As we all know, the United States has embarked on a campaign of intensifying harshness in criminal p...
Anyone interested in American criminal justice has to wonder why we have so many more people in pris...
We observe that countries where belief in the "American dream" (i.e., effort pays) prevails also set...
Mass Incarceration: Punitive Laws that Challenge Equal Rights and Opportunities for all explores Ame...
The peculiar harshness of modern American justice has led to a vigorous scholarly debate about the r...
What is the relationship of punishment theory to punishment practice? What should this relationship ...
Across the U.S., there was an explosion of severity in nearly every form of governmental response to...
American criminal law has a deep commitment to the presumption of innocence. Yet at the same time, A...
Prior research examining punitive attitudes has typically focused on the United States and citizens ...
The United States holds a comparably higher crime rate than European countries in the area of homici...
In his engaging article Retributivism and Reform, published in the Maryland Law Review, Chad Fland...
Defenders bear witness to an awful social experiment gone awry. Punishment has taken the place of ev...
The author examines the cultural and social factors that have impacted the United States’s and Europ...
According to the Enlightenment philosopher Montesquieu, as freedom advances, the severity of the pe...
James Q. Whitman, Harsh Justice: Criminal Punishment and the Widening Divide between America and Eur...
As we all know, the United States has embarked on a campaign of intensifying harshness in criminal p...
Anyone interested in American criminal justice has to wonder why we have so many more people in pris...
We observe that countries where belief in the "American dream" (i.e., effort pays) prevails also set...
Mass Incarceration: Punitive Laws that Challenge Equal Rights and Opportunities for all explores Ame...
The peculiar harshness of modern American justice has led to a vigorous scholarly debate about the r...
What is the relationship of punishment theory to punishment practice? What should this relationship ...
Across the U.S., there was an explosion of severity in nearly every form of governmental response to...
American criminal law has a deep commitment to the presumption of innocence. Yet at the same time, A...
Prior research examining punitive attitudes has typically focused on the United States and citizens ...
The United States holds a comparably higher crime rate than European countries in the area of homici...
In his engaging article Retributivism and Reform, published in the Maryland Law Review, Chad Fland...
Defenders bear witness to an awful social experiment gone awry. Punishment has taken the place of ev...
The author examines the cultural and social factors that have impacted the United States’s and Europ...
According to the Enlightenment philosopher Montesquieu, as freedom advances, the severity of the pe...